"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
Hey Doug,my first reaction is that new panels have to be washed before use and the time spent doing it is not mach less than actually reclaiming a screen. With some of the 300+ mesh panels going for $30+, I can't see the math working in my favor here (if disposing, selling or reclaiming later though it is worth thinking about). You are a numbers guy, how does your math work here?pierre
Hmm.My screen reclaim times are shaved pretty low now. I have a dip tank, and then I use a one step dehaze/degrease, then it's off to the screen room with warm, dry filtered air.The re-claim times are down to about 1.5 minutes or less for each screen, and the coating goes real quick. Production continues while screens are drying, etc.Stopping to remove tape and replace panels for single color jobs? No thanks.
It is a very targeted idea that works well in busy small shops.
Quote from: blue moon on May 13, 2011, 11:44:53 PMHey Doug,my first reaction is that new panels have to be washed before use and the time spent doing it is not mach less than actually reclaiming a screen. With some of the 300+ mesh panels going for $30+, I can't see the math working in my favor here (if disposing, selling or reclaiming later though it is worth thinking about). You are a numbers guy, how does your math work here?pierreWith cap films, you degrease and apply while wet then dry and then expose...You have to degrease regardless it removes the reclaiming or diverts that time when available.So how long does it take to collect the screens, place them into the tank, reclaim and go back to printing?How many shirts can be printed in that time.This Heresy is specific, may not work in many shops, and evokes lots of emotional resistance.It is a very targeted idea that works well in busy small shops.
EZ frames while quick, still take a few min to remove and replace a panel. If stretched to fast they will pop.
I can see where you're going with it, and yes it would work very well but I'd imagine within the confines of some pretty specific circumstances.
Are you familiar with the EZ frames? The hybrid changes some dynamics.
I agree that there is a time and place for it and was hoping for some more in depth analysis since you are the type to have it.EZ frames while quick, still take a few min to remove and replace a panel. If stretched to fast they will pop.As I type, I am starting to think that more screens might be a better answer. I do agree that there is a better way for some of the shops. One of my supplier's customers buys wooden screens and does not reclaim them, just puts them away (or so I am told). The cost of the screens is built into the setup.pierre
Quote from: DouglasGrigar on May 14, 2011, 12:35:34 AMAre you familiar with the EZ frames? The hybrid changes some dynamics.Familiar with them, but not so interested. I use loose mesh with M3 frames. I can get the corners just right so I can max out the tension over several sessions on the table. I'm one of those guys that looks for "meter stall".
I'm with Jason on this. I have no interest in these. I think a small manual shop might be into it, but no way would a production shop burning 25+ screens a day. Roller Frames, Roller Mesh, work hardened on a Roller Master, can't be beat IMHO.